The human blood DNA methylome displays a highly distinctive profile compared with other somatic tissues

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Abstract

In mammals, DNA methylation profiles vary substantially between tissues. Recent genome-scale studies report that blood displays a highly distinctive methylomic profile from other somatic tissues. In this study, we sought to understand why blood DNA methylation state is so different to the one found in other tissues. We found that whole blood contains approximately twice as many tissue-specific differentially methylated positions (tDMPs) than any other somatic tissue examined. Furthermore, a large subset of blood tDMPs showed much lower levels of methylation than tDMPs for other tissues. Surprisingly, these regions of low methylation in blood show no difference regarding genomic location, genomic content, evolutionary rates, or histone marks when compared to other tDMPs. Our results reveal why blood displays a distinctive methylation profile relative to other somatic tissues. In the future, it will be important to study how these blood specific tDMPs are mechanistically involved in blood-specific functions.

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Lowe, R., Slodkowicz, G., Goldman, N., & Rakyan, V. K. (2015). The human blood DNA methylome displays a highly distinctive profile compared with other somatic tissues. Epigenetics, 10(4), 274–281. https://doi.org/10.1080/15592294.2014.1003744

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